A woman I’ve known for years sent me a message a few years back — and it’s on my mind again tonight.
It wasn’t flirtatious. In fact, that was what made it feel so strangely heavy.
She wasn’t trying to begin anything romantic. She wasn’t hinting that she wanted an affair or that she was hoping to leave her husband. She made that very clear from the beginning. Instead, she simply wanted me to know something that had slowly dawned on her over the years.
She said she had misunderstood what kind of person she actually needed as a partner. She had thought the man she married represented the things that mattered to her. It turned out that I represented what really mattered to her. She just hadn’t known that back then.
We had known each other online for a long time and had met in person a couple of times. Nothing romantic ever developed. There was no dramatic split or unresolved tension. We had simply moved in different directions.
She eventually married another man. From the outside, her life appeared stable and successful. I rarely heard from her anymore. Then I got that long message one evening explaining that she had been quietly unhappy in her marriage almost from the beginning.

Don’t believe angry words and deception from a wounded heart
Vulnerability is scary, but failure to be open guarantees loss of love
Goodbye, Bessie (2008-2018)
In winner-take-all systems, swing voters matter only at election time
Sometimes we don’t really notice perfect match ’til it’s far too late
Patterns that made old mistakes keep us making same old errors
What if people don’t really care about understanding each other?
I never wanted to be ‘cool,’ but I wanted people to understand me
Trust and spontaneous order don’t require heavy hand of the state